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35% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BA Art and Contemporary Practices
About this course
Contemporary art practice is concerned with making and thinking that engages with the world as it is now: digitally mediated, socially complex, ecologically precarious and culturally diverse. Artists working today draw on a vast range of methods and approaches, from participatory and community-based practices to digital creation, public art, relational aesthetics and curatorial work. Studying contemporary art is not simply learning techniques; it is developing a way of seeing and responding to the world, and building the capacity to communicate ideas through visual, spatial and material forms. At the University of the Highlands and Islands, this four-year full-time programme invites you to explore your creative identity and develop your artistic practice in a distinctive Scottish environment. You will work on collaborative projects, participatory art, community initiatives and digital creation, as well as engaging with curation, public art, art and education, and relational practices that connect the art world with wider communities. Alongside your practical work, you will develop the ability to interpret and contextualise your practice theoretically, drawing on contemporary critical and cultural theory to understand the broader frameworks within which contemporary art operates. The programme encourages you to think about the relationship between art and its social context, and to develop a practice that is both personally expressive and publicly engaged. Graduates from contemporary art programmes pursue careers as artists, curators, arts administrators, community arts workers, educators, designers, art critics and cultural producers. Many work across the creative industries, including galleries, museums, arts organisations, community development bodies and educational institutions. The skills developed through art practice, including creative problem-solving, project management, critical reflection and communication across visual and written formats, are also valued in design, branding, communications and the wider cultural sector. Postgraduate study in fine art, curating, art education or cultural management is a well-established pathway for those who want to develop their practice further.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (75% response rate)
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